Seeking to turn criticism of some of his supporters into a major election issue, Donald Trump spent Monday focusing more on Hillary Clinton’s “basket of deplorables” remark than on his rival’s health situation.

“She divides people into baskets, as though they were objects, not human beings,” Trump said at a National Guard convention in Baltimore. “Hillary Clinton spoke with hatred and derision for the people who make this country run.”

Trump said Clinton — “an insider supported by powerful insiders attacking Americans who have absolutely no political power” — insulted all Americans when she said that half of his supporters could be put in a “basket of deplorables” that includes those who are “racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic — you name it.”

Devoting most of his speech to an attack on his opponent, Trump said Clinton exhibited “total disrespect for the people of our country.”

That idea that Donald Trump is softening his immigration policy: Not going to happen.

The Republican presidential nominee on Wednesday re-upped the harsh immigration rhetoric that electrified his primary campaign, vowing “no amnesty” for undocumented migrants living in the United States and promising to build a “beautiful” and “impenetrable” border wall that Mexico would pay for — hours after that country’s president vowed that it wouldn’t.

“This election is our last chance to secure the border, stop illegal immigration, and reform our laws to make your life better,” Trump said in Phoenix at the end of a dizzying day in which he made his first foray into international diplomacy with a visit to Mexico City.

On what might have been one of the most important days of his presidential campaign, Trump appeared to be recommitting his electoral fate in November to the white conservative base voters who swept him to victory in the GOP primary rather than seeking to broaden his base to a wider coalition of Americans.